"Never did he saw" or "never did he see"? And "it's been so long since I last/first saw you" or "see you"? THANKS!
1. Never DID he SEE." (After DO, DOES, DID, DON'T, DOESN'T, and DIDN'T, use the base form [bare infinitive] of the verb.)2. "Saw." (The "seeing" part of that sentence took place in the past.)
"They was" is never right. ("They" is plural; "was" is for singular nouns [except "you"].)"They were ..." is right, e.g., They were the best students last year.
What does "at it (again)" mean? In desperate need of help. Pleaseeee(:
It's an expression that means "doing (something) again."- I told my dog not to bark, but he's AT IT AGAIN. - Our neighbors had stopped practicing their loud music, but they're AT IT AGAIN. - Why do they argue so much? They're AT IT AGAIN.
Hello, right now I am struggling with if conditional.
So, I want to write a type 1 if conditional sentence but in past tense.
Should I write it as 'If it was too high or too low' or 'If it were too high or too low'?
Thank you very much!
"If it were ..." is only used in the subjunctive mood to express a desire, wish, or hypothetical situation. For example, "If it were on sale (but it's not), I would buy it." Read this article for more information about the subjunctive mood: http://bit.ly/1pWL29HIn a first conditional sentence in the past tense, just use past tense verbs on both sides:- If I ATE (past) your sandwich, WOULD (past) you be upset with me? - If I TOOK (past) your pencil without asking, what WOULD (past) you do? - If my dog KILLED (past) her favorite flowers, she MIGHT (past) faint.
'the thugs went on rampage'. can i just say 'the thugs went rampage'? does it change the whole sentence?
The sentence should actually be "The thugs went on a rampage." (You could also turn "rampage" into a verb and go with something like "The thugs rampaged through the streets.")
"Literally" means "actually; without exaggeration": I am literally dying of thirst. = If you don't give me something to drink right now, I will be dead.
Not really, but here's the technical distinction: "A road usually runs between two more distant points, such as between two towns. A street is described as being a paved road or highway—in a city, town, or village, especially one lined with houses, shops, or other buildings."
what does "red-handed" mean? e.g. "it felt like catching them cheating red-handed"
"Red-handed" means "having been discovered in or just after the act of doing something wrong or illegal." In other words, they got caught either while they were cheating or RIGHT AFTER they cheated. ✌️
haiii do you have a book that you think is good for us to read? especially for practice our english lesson like grammar vocab etc ..
I wanna try that method I hope it works for me
thanks for your answer :)
As a matter of fact, we're working on two such books. In the meantime, try this one: http://amzn.to/1InccBV (We've never read it, but it has good reviews.) ✌️
why does it take a long time? or why it takes a long time? which one is correct?
"Why does it take (such) a long time?" is correct. (Most people would ask "Why does it take so long?" For example, "Why does it take so long to bake a cake?") ✌️